A collection of twenty-nine American abolitionist periodicals,
and one British title, dating from 1827 through 1927, filmed from
holdings of the Library of Congress. Titles include Freedom's
Journal, Zion's Watchman, The Colored
American, and others, and stem from all parts of the U.S.,
including Salem, Ohio; New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Tuskegee,
San Francisco, Concord, Hampton, Providence, Rochester, Utica, and
London.

LCCN: (No Library of Congress Online Catalog entry)

GUIDE: 35-G, [Abolitionist Periodicals]
Consists of a typed list of the periodicals, inclusive dates filmed,
and place of publication.

Scrapbooks compiled by Robert P. Skinner, U.S. Consul
General at Marseilles, relating to his diplomatic mission to the
court of Menelik II, Emperor of Abyssinia (now called Ethiopia)
in 1903-04. One scrapbook consists of photographs with captions
clipped from Skinner's book Abyssinia of To-Day or
handwritten by Mr. or Mrs. Skinner. The other scrapbooks consist
of clippings from newspapers and a few magazines, most in English
but some in other languages. A consular report on Abyssinia dated
April 29, 1904 is also included.

Consists of masters theses, dissertations, and other
studies relating to academic and research libraries and to the fields
of historical, descriptive, and enumerative bibliography.

LCCN: (No Library of Congress Online Catalog entry)

GUIDE: Not in LC. The Microform Reading Room
card catalog has cards for these titles under: "ACRL microcard series;"
and, "Association of College and Reference Libraries." There are
also several dozen online records in MUMS for these titles, for
a total of nearly two hundred titles. Use the command " find t acrl
microcard" or "find t acrl microform."

A collection providing basic information on performances
at London's Sans Pareil/Adelphi Theatre from 1806-1900. Although
the Sans Pareil Theatre was built in 1806 as a private theater by
merchant John Scott for his aspiring actress daughter, by 1851 the
London Times called the Adelphi Theatre "the most popular theatre
of the metropolis with the best company in London." By studying
the record of each season, theater history researchers can learn
what was produced by whom and can trace the changing taste of audiences.
Daily calendars and seasonal summaries provide chronologies of the
season with names of authors and play titles, some plot summaries,
biographical information, reviews, information relative to specific
evening performances, curtain times, ticket prices, charity performances,
cast lists, genres, and productions by visiting companies.

A complete set of the two reports to Congress required
by the 1958 National Aeronautics and Space Act. Part A, Annual
Reports on Activities in the Aeronautics and Space Field, 1958-1984,
contains the annual reports from the President detailing the activities
and accomplishments of all federal agencies in the field of aeronautics
and space. Part B, Semiannual Reports to the Congress from
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1958-1969
are the reports required of NASA. These are continued after 1969
in Part A. These reports provide key information about NASA from
its beginnings to the first moon landing, help trace the history
of manned space flight from Eisenhower's Mercury Program through
the Apollo Program of the 1960s, and detail information about numerous
lesser-known programs. These reports were not published as federal
depository items and were not included in the Serial Set.

LCCN: 90-956372

GUIDE: 393, A Guide to the Microfilm Edition
of Aeronautics and Space Reports to the Congress, 1958-1984.

Approximately 2,500 documents, compiled and indexed by
the National Security Archive of the Fund for Peace, Inc., arranged
in chronological order. Includes copies of cables, situation reports,
confidential memoranda, briefing papers, airgrams, and foreign press
reports. Quality of reproduced material varies, and because many
documents were previously classified, sections or pages are sometimes
obliterated.

LCCN: 92-953046

GUIDE: Z6465.U5 A6 1990, Afghanistan: The
Making of U.S. Policy, 1973-1990 : Guide and index.

Covers a key two-decade period of anti-colonialism, at
the close of which nearly a dozen African nations achieved independence.
Developments in Rhodesia and South Africa foreshadowed later events
and conditions in those countries. These reports are for the most
part detailed historical and political monographs, written to inform
U.S. and Allied leaders of past, and present conditions and future
prospects in Africa. The OSS/State Department reports were written
by highly respected academics and other researchers; writers in
the series included Herbert Marcuse, Norman O. Brown, John King
Fairbank, and Cora DuBois. Representative of the reports are the
following titles: "Political Parties and Personalities in Tunisia"
(1950); "Survey of Tanganyika" (1943); "The Capacity of Eritrea
for Independence" (1950); "Trans-African Overland Routes: Ports,
Railroads, Rivers and Lakes, Roads" (1942).

LCCN: 86-892234

GUIDE: 105-28, A Guide to OSS/State Department
Intelligence and Research Reports. XIII. Africa 1941-61.
A reel guide to titles in this collection, with a subject index.

Primarily memos or brief monographs, including cables
and weekly or regular situation reports, these documents encompass
all aspects of African politics, economics, and public life. The
entire second reel consists of reports on the Congo in the 1960's.
Other features are biographic reports on various figures in South
Africa and other African countries, reports on potential political
and military activities, and reports relating to the decolonization
of Africa.

LCCN: 86-893449

GUIDE: 105-70, CIA Research Reports. Africa,
1946-1976. Consists of a reel guide of titles, arranged by
country, with a subject index.

Studies by noted scholars and analysts from the academic
and government research communities, covering a wide variety of
public affairs and political issues in emerging independent African
nations. Representative sources of these reports include the Rand
Corporation, the Army War College, the Agency for International
Development; the General Accounting Office; the Smithsonian; the
Brookings Institution; the American University; JPRS; and the Center
for International Studies at M.I.T. The collection emphasizes problems
of military control and security, domestic and political strife,
and economic development. Sample titles include: "Namibia 1979:
Another Angola"; "U.N. Peacekeeping in the Congo: 1960-1964"; "Case
Studies in Insurgency and Revolutionary Warfare: Algeria 1954-1962";
and "The Warrior Heritage: A Study of Rhodesia (1980)."

A supplement to the collection by the same title covering
1962-1980 (Microfilm 86/2020. LCCN 86-892127). The topics are the
political, social and economic issues of African countries during
the period. U. S. involvement in these areas is also discussed.

LCCN: 89-893223

GUIDE: 105-63a, A Guide to Africa: Special
Studies, 1980-1985 Supplement. A reel list with titles of
papers and synopses of their contents.

Includes British Public Record Office C.O. 879, a collection
of selected correspondence, memoranda and other documents copied
for internal use in the Colonial Office or, in some cases, for circulation
to the Cabinet. Many of these documents were also edited for publication
as Parliamentary Command Papers. This collection would be useful
to historians studying the effects of British colonial rule on Africa.

LC Call Number: (No Library of Congress Online Catalog entry)

GUIDE: CD1052.A55, List of Colonial Office
Confidential Print to 1916. Books 1-116 are indexed in this
guide (no. 8 in the series, Public Record Office Handbooks). The
Library of Congress has only books 1-12, covering the period 1848-1923.
Request film by reel number after the slash at the beginning of
each section, e.g., for C.O. 879/78, write: Microfilm 03759, reel
78.

More than 160 serial titles, including monographic series,
annual reports, and government publications, dating from the early
19th century through 1978. Places of publication include cities
in the U.S. and Europe as well as places in Africa. Among the titles
are holdings of the Microform Reading Room, the Law Library, the
Newspaper Reading Room, and the Near East Section. However, the
majority of African newspapers held by the Library in either the
Near East Section or the Newspaper Reading Room are not listed here.
In addition, several titles listed are held only as master negative
microfilm by the Photoduplication Service. Other titles of related
interest have been added to the Library's collections since this
list was compiled; interested researchers should consult appropriate
periodical catalogs and/or a reference librarian to determine title
or holdings in microfilm not listed in the guide.

LCCN: (No Library of Congress Online Catalog entry)

GUIDE: 156, Africana Serials in Microform
in the Library of Congress. A finding aid compiled in 1978
by Anthony Mullan, lists titles with place of publication, years
on film, and microform call numbers; see also Photoduplication Circular
84.

Surviving correspondence, notes for speeches and lectures,
etc., of Hitler and Hitler's staff, in particular those of the National
Socialist Party Chancellery of the NSDAP, and its officers and subdivisions;
also individual correspondence with Hess and Borman. Filmed from
holdings of provincial and federal archives in Germany (BRD). The
documents are arranged by archive or repository.

LCCN: 86-890738

GUIDE: Not in LC. A microfiche introduction and
index is available at the beginning of the collection.

A total of 100 volumes, consisting of hard to find and
well-researched articles on American films and actors from the 1920's
through the 1950's. Also includes many hundreds of reprints of posters,
scenes, portraits, ads, and cast lists, with special attention to
popular genres such as westerns, serials, and B-films.

Consists of 1470 photographs of Allegro's associated
with Khirbet Qumran and the texts discovered there, as well as those
associated with some other places, such as 'Ain Feshkha, Khirbet
Mird, and Wadi Murrabba'at. The photographs are arranged in four
categories: A. Archaeology; B. Biography; C. Copper scroll; and
D. Documents.

Documents dating from 1922-1930, including a statement
of Germany's post-war obligations, records of various meetings,
plans for reparations, military restrictions, and finances of the
Reich. Also included are reports on the Reichsbank, German industries,
and the Ruhr district.

LCCN: 85-891352

GUIDE: 105-5, A Guide to Reparation Papers
of the Allied Powers Reparation Commission.

Continues several titles from the Underground
newspaper microfilm collection (Microfilm 02882),
to which are added other alternative press periodicals expressing
a range of opinions on political, social, environmental and health
issues from national and local papers. Most of the holdings in this
collection begin in the latter half of the 1980s. Found here are
numerous well-known periodicals which are widely indexed and may
also be bound in the Library's general collections and individual
subscription microfilms. Examples are Black Scholar,
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Camera Obscura,
Common Cause, Dissent, Granta,
Mother Earth News, and Mother Jones. Also
included are several urban free weeklies (Reader, Chicago)
and gay/lesbian publications (Blade, Washington, D.C.).
Each guide covers one year of the project, with no cumulative index
to date.

A collection of books, portfolios, and pamphlets about
architecture and other closely related subjects published in the
U.S. between the Revolution and 1900. The emphasis of the collection
is on builders and house pattern books, but a number of descriptive
works such as guide books are also included. The collection is based
on Henry-Russell Hitchcock's American Architectural Books
and Helen Park's A List of Architectural Books Available in
America before the Revolution. The microfilm edition follows
the same sequence as the listing in the Hitchcock bibliography,
which is alphabetical by author and then by title.

LCCN: 84-114422

GUIDE: Z5944.U5 E44, Index to the Microfilm
Edition of American Architectural Books. The index matches
in parallel columns Hitchcock bibliographic entry numbers to microfilm
reel numbers. Since first editions were filmed whenever possible
for the collection, Hitchcock's bibliography should be consulted
for other editions and for institutions owning copies of the titles.
This index also includes the supplement to the microfilm collection
which is based on Helen Park's work.

This set presently consists of two series of microfiches
containing articles on North Americans reproduced from 502 biographical
encyclopedias; these sources include write-ups on some 48,000 individuals
over a span of four hundred years of history.

LCCN: 90-956052 (Series I); 96-195621 (Series II)

GUIDE: CT213.A64 1998 MicRR, American Biographical
Index (2nd cumulated and enlarged edition), . 10 vols. This
is a cumulated index to both Series I and II of the microfiche Archive
sets. Entries distinguish between the two by use of roman numerals.
An entry from "Ashmead, Henry Graham" is of the form "I 35, 181-182;
1829, 269; II 18, 144." This means that in Series I (Microfiche
90/7009), fiche number 35 has articles on Ashmead on frames 181
and 182; also in the same Series, fiche number 1829 has one relevant
frame, #269; and in Series II (Microfiche 97/15) fiche number 18
has one article on Ashmead at frame 144.

A collection of early American books and pamphlets which
provides significant primary sources for the study of American culture.
The material is mostly in English but there are some titles in other
languages including Spanish, French, German, and Swedish.

Close to 11,000 titles, many rare and difficult to find,
covering American fiction writing from 1774 to 1905. In almost all
cases only one edition, the first, was filmed. In a few cases a
variant edition was considered important enough for inclusion. The
collection was based on the three-volume Lyle Wright bibliography,
American Fiction, 1774-1850, A Contribution Toward
a Bibliography (Z1231.F4 W9 1969 MRR Alc); 1851-1875
(Z1231.F4 W92 1965 MRR Alc); and 1876-1900 (Z1231.
F4 W93 MRR Alc). Request by volume number and reel number, as given
in guide.

Twenty-five memoirs by noted directors, producers, actors,
writers and cinematographers. Topics covered range widely and include
theories of cinematography, production problems, minorities in film,
the economics of filmmaking, the McCarthy era, the effects of television
on the motion picture industry, etc. Among the memoirists are Tay
Garnett, Howard Koch, Abraham Polonsky and Crane Wilbur.

LCCN: 83-102017 (fiche); 84-103462 (film)

GUIDE: AI3.07 No. 2, New York Times Oral
History Program, Oral History Guide No. 2.

Over 200 interviews with important contributors to the
motion picture and television industries who offer insight into
acting, directing, producing, and script writing, and contain fascinating
anecdotes. The "interviews" are actually transcripts of weekly seminars
held at the American Film Institute from 1967 to 1976. Nearly 60
of the interviews were published in Dialogue on Film, a monthly
publication of the Institute, which, after October 1975, became
a section in American Film. This particular group of published interviews
may be found in No. 199 of the collection. Those interviewed include
Ingmar Bergman, Ray Bradbury, George Cukor, Federico Fellini, Elia
Kazan, Harold Lloyd, Roman Polanski, William Wyler, and others.

LCCN: 83-101740 (fiche); 84-104635 (film)

GUIDE: AI3.O7 No. 2, New York Times Oral
History Program Oral History Guide No. 2, pp. 3-7. Lists
the persons interviewed.

This microfiche supplement to the printed series by the
same name was begun in 1981 to provide full text distribution of
material omitted from the printed version due to lack of space.
The material includes official expressions of U.S. foreign policy,
including the texts of major official addresses, statements, interviews,
press conferences, and communications by the White House, the State
Department, and other U.S. officials. The supplement follows the
same arrangement as the printed series: by functional subject, then
by world, area, country, and chronology.

Contains over 5,500 reports on the history, architecture,
archaeology, ethnology, and art of 337 national parks, historic
sites, and structures. Reports vary widely and may include maps,
photographs, plans, architectural drawings, drawings of objects,
or bibliographies, or consist of letters, diaries, legal documents,
or field notes.

A collection of nearly 70 manuscript autobiographies
held by the Immigration History Research Center at the University
of Minnesota. Most of the authors were immigrants; however, some
were first or second generation Americans. Most of the autobiographies
are in English. The final 29 autobiographies are drawn from the
Finnish-American Family History Collection. Request by reel number.

LCCN: 90-12990

GUIDE: 105-244, A Guide to the Microfilm
Edition of Research Collections in American Immigration. Part 1:
Manuscript Autobiographies from the Immigration History Research
Center, University of Minnesota. Has two sections: a reel
index and a subject index. The reel index, the more useful of the
sections, contains a brief synopsis of each autobiography.

Consists of typed transcripts of interviews with elderly
individuals, conducted between 1967 and 1973. Each interview is
preceded by a subject synopsis of its contents, and the interviewee's
age, birthplace, occupation, religion, and degree of Indian blood.
The Library has only part two, numbers 1-243, of this collection.
The tribes represented are the Sioux, Chippewa, Crow, Winnebago,
Spokane, and a few others represented by one or two individuals.
Non-Indians associated with the various tribes were also interviewed.

More than 2,000 microfiche representing about 130 titles
produced by American Indian groups and Indian interest organizations.
There is some overlap with the microform titles Periodicals
by and about the North American Indian (Microfilm 90/8032)
and Periodicals by and about North American Indians, 1923-1981
(Microfilm 94/2118).

LCCN: sf92-94251

GUIDE: 359a, American Indian Periodicals
in the Princeton University Library. A title list with dates
of coverage.

Elected union officers' reports for twenty-four active
and twenty-three inactive labor unions, issued 1897 to 1980, with
some updates through 1988. The officers' reports are generally compiled
and distributed before a union's convention, to inform the members
and delegates of the "state of the union": contract negotiations
and settlements; employment, wages and working conditions; benefits;
administration, jurisdiction and finance; organizing and legislative
activities; strikes and mergers; relations with other unions, and
so on.

More than 250 unions' papers are represented from 1836-1974,
with annual updates from 1975(?) through 1982. The collection was
compiled by Bernard G. Naas, from collections of academic, public,
trade union, and government libraries. The constitutions and proceedings
of the AFL, and of important unions in nearly all industries provide
a comprehensive record of the formal structure, public positions,
and recorded debates of American trade unions. The collection falls
into two parts. Part 1 covers 116 unions, 1836 to date, while part
2 covers 160 unions, 1964 to date. Request by part and reel number
(letter/number code for union, e.g., A1). Specify whether requesting
constitution or proceeding, and the year wanted. Annual supplements
to the guide give access to collection for 1979 forward.

More than 2,700 reels of microfilm among the three series,
containing early American periodicals from approximately 300 major
research libraries. Eleven hundred titles cover the period from
1741 through the early 1900s, a period which includes the beginnings
of American literature from Benjamin Franklin on, as well as the
westward expansion in the 19th century and the boom in periodical
publishing that took place between 1825 and 1850. The periodicals
are accessible through a printed index by title, subject, editor
and reel number. Entries indicate dates of publication, publisher,
whether the periodical contains illustrations, holdings in the collection,
history of title changes and editors, and locations of print copies
in other libraries.

LCCN: 83-138194

GUIDE: Z6951.H65, American Periodicals,
1741-1900: An Index to the Microfilm Collections. Film must
be requested by collections number, series number, and reel number.

Introductory reading materials including primers, readers,
spelling books, alphabet books, teaching manuals, and non-instructional
juvenile texts in book format. With the exception of three readers
for adult instruction, and two readers used with illiterate soldiers
during World War II, all materials in the collection are for children.
Only books or book-like imprints are included--hornbooks, broadsides,
charts, reading cards, and the like are excluded from the set. Most
of the books in the collection are American imprints, except for
a few English imprints imported for the colonies which served as
models for American texts. The evolution of the modern reading textbook
can be traced using the materials that comprise the American Primers
collection. The contrast between early and late texts included in
the collection imparts a valuable record of both American education
and American culture.

LCCN: 89-70532

GUIDE: 105-248, American Primers : Guide
to the Microform Collection. Includes an excellent historical
introduction. Name, title, and chronological indexes refer to the
Reference Bibliography which lists microfiche order number for the
collection.

An annual collection of the results of hundreds of opinion
polls, reproducing on microfiche data originally released in the
form of newspaper articles, special reports, press releases, computer
printouts, etc. The surveys of opinion cover virtually the entire
range of social issues: political, consumer, personal, etc. The
sources designing and administering the polls include the Roper,
Gallup, Harris, and Merit organizations; newspapers and news services;
think tanks, research centers, and trade associations.

LCCN: 90-640903

GUIDE: HM261.A463, American Public Opinion
Index. An index by subject, providing microfiche numbers.

Periodicals from 1805-1929 that were issued in Baltimore,
Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and St. Louis. While they cover
mainstream theater in Boston, New York, Chicago, Washington, D.C.,
and Philadelphia, many of them also reviewed vaudeville, magic,
and opera productions. In addition to reviews of productions, the
biographical sketches, interviews with actors and actresses, pictures,
theater listings, and advertisements found in these periodicals
all provide an important source for studying the history of the
American stage.

LCCN: 93-630317

GUIDE: The start of each reel contains a detailed
listing of publications, volumes, and dates. See also the contents
note in the LC cataloging record.

A collection of published and unpublished materials in
Amnesty International's Research Archives, dating from 1962 to 1997
(5/99). Organized by country, within five worldwide regions, the
dossiers for each country include entries from annual reports and
newsletters, news releases, other AI publications, and general AI
material and background papers. A separate section of general publications
and briefing papers follows the country dossiers.

LCCN: 90-956040

GUIDE: 257,Guide to the Microform Collection:
Amnesty International, 1962- 1990. The Guides to the Supplements
and the Cumulative Guides, 1962-1996, bring the coverage up to date.

Microfilm collection of original manuscript sources from
the John Rylands University Library of Manchester, England. Seven
of the nine reels reproduce the Gazette Manuscrite,
a manuscript newsletter sent weekly from Paris to Rennes, 1775-1793.
Also includes manuscripts from the Comite Revolutionnaire as well
as miscellaneous literary collections. Topics include trade and
commerce, French provincial life and society (especially Brittany),
mercantilism, and revolutionary events. Literary documents include
epitaphs, verse, satire, and letters. Primary towns include Paris,
Brest, Lorient, Nantes, Lesneven, Paimboeuf, Bayonne, and St. Malo.

LCCN: 92-953089

GUIDE: 215, Ancien Regime in Turmoil?
... A Listing and Guide to the Microfilm Collection.
Includes a detailed reel contents list.

Microfiches and pamphlets contained in four-ring loose-leaf
binders. A collection reproducing several thousand photographs from
the archive of the Fototeca Union housed in the American Academy
of Rome. The purpose of this collection is to provide a comprehensive,
visual survey of ancient Roman architecture and topography. Each
photograph is accompanied by a bibliographic citation of a source
or sources describing the work. Volume I is arranged in three parts:
(1) Rome, (2) Italy, and (3) Empire. Volume II is arranged in three
sections as well: (1) Empire, (2) Pompeii, and (3) Italy.

LCCN: 83-195316

GUIDE: 48, [Ancient Roman Architecture:
Photographic Archive on Microfiche. Indexes, Volume I and II].
See also the related reference work, A Pictorial Dictionary
of Ancient Rome (vols. I and II) NA310 .N28 1968b.

Access is provided by indexes in Guide 48 which list the volume
number and fiche number for each entry. For sites in Rome see the
printed index included in Volume I of the collection.

A collection of about 450 selected pamphlets from the
Israel Solomons Collection. It includes works by Manasseh ben Israel,
David Nieto, Baron Macaulay, Antonio Canovas, David Levi, William
Arnall, Sir Francis Goldsmid, Franciso de Faria, Daniel Defoe, etc.
Several pamphlets deal with the Jewish Nationalization Act of 1753.
A few are dramatic works. The pamphlets are primarily in English.
Several are in other languages including Portuguese and Spanish.
They range in date primarily from the early 17th through the mid-19th
centuries.

This collection provides microfiche facsimiles in color
of manuscripts containing Old English and located in various British
libraries.

GUIDE: DA150 .A75 1994 MicRR, Anglo-Saxon
Manuscripts in Microfiche Facsimile, vol.1, vol.2 and vol.5.
Volume 1 describes ten manuscripts held by the British Library which
are books of prayers and healing and provides the manuscripts' histories.
Volume 2 describes eight manuscripts held by the British Library
which are Psalters and provides the manuscripts' histories. Volume
5 describes ten manuscripts, held by various libraries, which are
Latin manuscripts with Anglo-Saxon Glosses and provides the manuscripts'
histories.

Corporations' annual reports to shareholders, for companies
listed on the New York, American, and Toronto stock exchanges. The
reports usually give basic financial statements, management news,
etc. This collection does not include reports for subsidiaries,
privately held corporations, or corporations that trade stock over
the counter (OTC). Microform Reading Room has 1956-1973, Business
Reference Services has 1974 to present. Later years have been acquired
from another publisher. See also the Q-File (SEC File) collection
of corporation annual reports and financial statements housed in
BRS. Request by the name of the company and year of report. The
reports are on microcard for the years 1956-1964, and on microfiche
for 1965-1983.

A 13-volume, 6,000-page collection containing information
on the Courts, Customs Houses, original wills, Pipe Rolls, and parliamentary
records of Ireland from 1869 to 1931. The reports of the Deputy
Keepers of the Public Record Office (Numbers 1-56) provide a continuous
account of administration and acquisitions of the Office. Of particular
interest to genealogists are the details of several thousand wills
made over the last 300 years. The reports are arranged chronologically,
in two microfiche binders, the first covering reports for 1869-1893
and the second 1894-1931. Unfortunately there is no index.

A comprehensive overview of the U.S. Navy's 19th-century
institutional and operational history. The first two reports contain
disparate communications from the Navy Department to Congress: correspondence;
lists of personnel, naval stations, and captured West Indies pirate
vessels; appropriations; expenditures; etc. From late 1823 forward
appear summaries of activities, correspondence from naval officers,
lists of deceased officers, widows and pensioners. After 1824 the
reports are more uniform and are excellent source documents for
the navy's increasing involvement in commercial and technological
developments. Topics included are: summaries of courts martial and
courts of inquiry; development of the Naval Academy, Naval Observatory,
and Naval War College; squadron reports; Mexican War and Civil War
operations; demobilization with reduction of personnel and the fleet
after 1866; gradual build-up from 1884; and the transition from
sail to steam.

LCCN: 90-956087

GUIDE: 240, A Guide to the Scholarly Resources
Microfilm Edition of the Annual Reports of the Secretary of the
Navy, 1821-1901.

This collection contains all of the society's anti-slavery
materials, including tracts, miscellaneous pamphlets, and other
ephemeral documents, and some rare, early periodicals of the Thompson-Clarkson
Collection, on which Thomas Clarkson based his History of
the Abolition of Slavery. It also contains items from the
typescript "Chronological Bibliography of Anti-Slavery Tracts, "
based on materials found in several British libraries.

LCCN: 82-197665

GUIDE: 86, [Anti-slavery Collection: 18-19th
Centuries, from the Library of the Society of Friends]. Describes
the contents of all the reels. Each reel also has at its beginning
a list of its contents.

A collection of several hundred memoirs of farmers, miners,
housewives, teachers, old settlers, trappers, and musicians, illustrating
the rich Appalachian culture, history and folklore. Many topics
are covered, among them family life, politics, social customs, language,
feuds, the Civil War, black culture of Appalachia since slavery,
mining, courtship, education, unionization, religion, the Depression,
migration, music, handicrafts, and moonshining.

LCCN: 82-224399

GUIDE: AI3.07 No. 2, New York Times Oral
History Program, Oral History Guide No. 2.

This collection contains the full text of 90% of the
books and documents reviewed in the Appropriate technology
Sourcebook: A Guide to Practical Books for Village and Small Community
Technology. Technologies that are technically, socially and
economically suited for communities with limited resources are presented,
covering the fields of housing, energy, agriculture, forests and
forestry, transportation, health care, water supply, and small industries.

LCCN: 88-890734

GUIDE: T49.5 .D37 1986, Appropriate Technology
Sourcebook: a Guide to Practical Books for Village and Small Community
Technology.

Correspondence between Great Britain's Foreign Office
Arab Bureau and British military and diplomatic officials in the
Middle East (extending by definition from India to the Sudan). It
also contains a "secret" intelligence publication entitled the Arab
Bulletin, the first number of which was submitted to the Arab Bureau
by Captain T. E. Lawrence.

LC Call Number: (No Library of Congress Online Catalog entry)

GUIDE: Not in LC. Access is provided through
a Public Record Office Register at the beginning of reel 1. It lists
the PRO file number, inclusive dates, a description, and a volume
number. Following the register is a list of documents within each
volume including the date, the origin of the document, the subject,
and a series number. Film should be requested by file number.

1. Middle East.

Arabic manuscripts in the library of the S.O.A.S,
University of London. Zug, Switzerland : Inter Documentation
Co., 1985. 1,562 microfiches.

LC Call Number: Microfiche 99/14

Reproduces over 400 items grouped in 394 entries, and
includes, in addition to such traditional Islamic disciplines as
Tafsir, Hadith, Fiqh, etc., works on mathematics, astronomy, medicine,
falconry, archery, and military equitation.

LCCN: 98-220259

GUIDE: 464, Guide to the Microform Collection
Arabic Manuscripts in the SOAS.

"Reproduces a one-alphabet cumulation of the most important
biographical reference works on the Arab world published between
1858 and 1993. A separate name index provides identifying information
to individuals contained in the works."

Consists of the personal archive of Benjamin Burlamacchi,
including bookkeeping, documents concerning lawsuits and disputes,
loose papers concerning the trading company Burlamacchi, and correspondence.
Chiefly in Dutch, German, French, and Italian. Title taken from
t.p. of printed guide. Filmed from originals held in the Amsterdam
Municipal Archives (Gemeentearchief Amsterdam).

An extensive collection of trade catalogs dating from
the 19th and 20th centuries. The illustrations generally appear
with greater clarity than does the text. Many catalogs pre-date
the Civil War although post-war industrialization and production
steadily expanded the use of the illustrated trade catalog as a
means of advertising for the building supplies industry. Architects,
builders and homeowners could consult the catalogs for products
that would increase their comfort and convenience as well as enhance
the aesthetics of their homes. The collection would well serve the
historian and the restorer.

LCCN: 89-5754

GUIDE: 105-232, Guide to Architectural
Trade Catalogues from Avery Library, Coumbia University.
Facilitates searching by product, manufacturer and manufacturer's
location. Identification of product categories is by the Sweet's
Catalog File system which uses headings such as (but not limited
to) metals, doors and windows, masonry, finishes, and specialties.

Reports on violations of the human rights of native Americans,
primarily those in Central and South America, but also in North
America.

NOTE: The collection contains material in both English and Spanish,
and is accompanied by a 1980 document, Report of the Fourth
Russell Tribunal on the Rights of the Indians of the Americas,
Conclusions.

LCCN: 87-893451

GUIDE: 124, Archive of the Fourth Russell
Tribunal on the Rights of the Indians of the Americas. Printed
inventory.

A compilation of biographical notices selected from 180
biographical works on about 300,000 people in France, French-speaking
Switzerland, Belgium, French Canada, and the Francophone colonies,
as well as foreigners associated with France for a period of their
lives. The collection represents phase one (French
Biographical Archive) and (French
Biographical Archive. New Series) of this project.
The entries in this collection were taken from 302 biographical
reference works originally published between 1647 and 1986.

LCCN: 90-956049

GUIDE: CT1003.I53 1998 MicRR, Index Biographique
Français. 2ème édition cumulée
et augmentée. Guide consists of seven volumes. Each biographical
entry provides the name of an individual (family name and first
namee), date of birth, date of death, occupation or profession,
country, biographical source (title of work in which entry appeared),
the series (I or II) of the Archives Biographiques
Françaises in which the entry appears, and
the fiche number and frame number of the actual entry. Notes on
use are given in French, English, and German. Patron needs to request
item by listing Series I or Series II of the Archives
Biographiques Françaises along with the fiche
number and frame number of the specific biographical entry desired.

Contains over two million pages from the archives of
the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs covering the period 1868
to 1945 (all now released from security classification). The bulk
of the collection consists of two series of documents: one of documents
from the Meiji and Taisho periods (1868-1912), the other of documents
from the Showa period (1926- ). Other series include "unindexed
documents"; a series mainly of printed and mimeographed studies
prepared by members of the ministry for desk use; papers of the
Parliamentary Vice-Minister; biographical materials; a treaties
series; documents of the International Military Tribunal; and a
long telegram series of outgoing and incoming messages between Foreign
Service officers in the field and the Minister in Tokyo (in Japanese).
This collection supplements the collection based on the archives
of the Japanese Army, Navy, and other government agencies entitled
Selected Japanese Army and Navy Archives, Microfilm
5041.

LCCN: 83-198620

GUIDE: CD2175.U9, Checklist of Archives
in the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

1. Japan--Foreign relations--1868-1945--Archives.

Archives of British men of science : a survey of
private and institutional holdings of British scientific archives.
-- Roy M. MacLeod and James R. Friday. -- London : Mansell, 1972.
-- 59 microfiches ; 11 x 15 cm.

LC Call Number: Microfiche 82/224

A guide to the surviving papers of some 3,400 British
men of science who flourished mainly between 1870 and 1950. T he
collection is more representative of scientists from England and
Wales than those from Scotland and Ireland. Each entry provides
birth and death dates, degrees, whether the individual was a Fellow
of the Royal Society, where enquiries were made, responses to enquiries,
and the location of any items discovered. The compilers note when
no papers could be located.

LCCN: 83-117489

GUIDE: 173, Archives of British Men of
Science. Contains an alphabetical index listing all scientists
included and fiche and frame numbers for each entry. It also describes
the selection criteria and the procedure followed in searching for
extant papers. Before requesting material the user should refer
to the "Notes for users" section.

1. Scientists--Great Britain--Manuscripts.

The archives of the Council for World Mission, 1775-1940.
Africa and Madagascar. Zug, Switzerland : Inter
Documentation Co., 1978. [1-18, 57-236] microfiches.

The Archives of the Council of World Mission (incorporating
the archives of the London missionary society) are among the oldest
of its kind and contain a wealth of unpublished source materials
relating to colonial countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
They include committee minutes, journals, personal and official
correspondence to and from the missions, reports, diaries kept by
the missionaries on the field, and other miscellaneous papers. This
collection is a portion of these archives. See also Council
for World Mission archives. Africa (Microfiche
97/360) elsewhere in this guide.

A collection of finding aids and records documenting
the activities of the Soviet State and Communist Party from 1917
until 1991. Microfilmed from the holdings of the Centre for the
Preservation of Contemporary Documentation (TsKhSD), Russian Centre
for the Preservation and Study of Documents of Most Recent History
(RTsKhIDNI), and the State Archives of the Russian Federation (GARF).

LCCN: 96-627178

GUIDE: 431, Archives of the Soviet Communist
Party and Soviet State : catalogue of finding aids and documents
(1st ed. issued in 1995). Much more complete is the online guide, Guide to the Archives of the Soviet Communist Party and Soviet State : Microfilm Collection, 1903-1992. LC has
reel indexes (2 v.): Archives of the Soviet Communist Party and
Soviet
State
:
finding
aids
and documents
from the three key archives on microfilm. Library of Congress.
Contents of shipment 1; and, Library of Congress. Contents of
shipment 2.

The Trades Union Congress (TUC) is the major British
federation of labor unions, serving as a central coordinating agency
for British unions since 1868, and acting as a major link between
the unions and government, during this century.

Among the items filmed from the TUC archives for this collection
are its quarterly reports up to 1918, open letters, addresses,
and records of debates in Parliament, as well as pamphlets and
reports on organizing, on working conditions, and on labor's role
in government, in foreign affairs, in worker education, and in
defense policy and disarmament. Arranged chronologically, many
of the pamphlets are personally authored by Sir Walter M. Citrine,
leader for many years of the TUC.

LCCN: 83-115949

GUIDE: 81, [Archives of the Trades Union
Congress. Series II. Pamphlets and Leaflets (1887-1960)].
Lists the pamphlets and gives brief titles. The guide is also reproduced
on microfiche as the first item in each of the three chronological
sections.

A collection of 250,000 biographical entries on 1,700
microfiche. Entries cover individuals living from the pre-Christian
era to the middle of this century. This collection represents phase
one (ABI I) and phase two (Nuova Serie, ABI II) of this project.
The entries in this collection were taken from 459 of the "most
significant and representative biographical reference works" which
together make up over 770 volumes published between the 17th and
middle of the 20th century.

LCCN: 90-956380 (ABI I); 96-195704 (ABI II)

GUIDE: CT1123.I53 1997, Indice Biografico
Italiano. 2a edizione corretta ed ampliata. Guide appears
in seven volumes. Each biographical entry provides the name of an
individual (family name and first name), date of birth, date of
death, occupation or profession, country, biographical source (title
of work in which entry appeared), the part (I or II) of the Archivio
biografico italiano in which the entry appears,
and the fiche number and frame number of the actual entry. Notes
on use are given in Italian, English, and German. Patron needs to
request item by listing Part I or Part II of the Archivio
biografico italiano along with the fiche number
and frame number of the specific biographical entry.

See also GUIDE: 190, Italienisches Biographishes
Archiv = Italian Biographical Archive. A list of the sources
used for the ABI I compilation.

The first and second phase of this project represents
a collection of ca. 410,000 biographical entries on 2,162 microfiche.
Entries cover individuals living from the Roman period to the middle
of the 20th century. The entries in this collection were taken from
637 biographical reference works which together make up 1,500 volumes
published between the 17th and 20th centuries.

LCCN: 96-195662 (Series I); 96-195696 (Series II)

GUIDE: CT1345.I53 1995 , Indice Biográfico
de España, Portugal, e Iberoamérica. Guide appears
in seven volumes. Each entry provides the name of an individual
(family name and first name), date of birth, date of death, occupation
or profession, country, biographical source (title of work in which
entry appeared), the part (I or II) of the Archivo
Biográfico... in which the entry appears,
and the fiche number and frame of the actual entry. Notes on use
are given in Spanish, Portuguese, English, and German. Patron needs
to request item by listing Part I or Part II of the Archivo
Biográfico along with the fiche number and
fiche frame of the specific biographical entry. Explanatory notes
are in Italian, German, and English.

A collection of handwritten, typed and printed materials
from the late 19th and early 20th centuries dealing with Madero's
public life. It includes letters, telegrams, circulars, bills, newspaper
and magazine clippings, business orders and accounts, and the handwritten
original of Madero's work, La Sucesion Presidencial. Among the topics
covered are Madero's presidential campaign and other political matters,
personal matters, public works, complaints, military and business
matters, etc.

LCCN: 83-195728

GUIDE: 104, Archivos Microfilmados en la
Biblioteca National de Antropología e Historia. Consists
of a very brief description of the collection. The collection has
been filmed "copiador" by "copiador," several of which have a list
of correspondents at the beginning; and is followed by a number
of "cajas", generally in overall chronological order.

More than 350,000 pages of Spanish language primary source
documents representing transactions spanning 190 years of Spain's
colonial government in Mexico as far north as Santa Fe, New Mexico.
The material is arranged chronologically by year. Each year is divided
into five general sections sometimes with a 6th "miscellaneous"
section. It includes documents on the day-to-day administration
of the territory, directives and correspondence from officials of
all ranks, civil law, law suits, wills, "residencias" of government
officials, materials on the slave trade and sales of slaves, mining
records and claims, and criminal cases and records.

Printed and manuscript materials from the 17th through
the 19th centuries, dealing with activities in the Veracruz area.
Included are actas, decrees, municipal records, genealogies, census
lists, cedulas reales, reports, minutes and testimonies. Among the
topics covered are local history, commerce, agriculture, mining,
slavery, ecclesiastical matters, public health, the founding of
Veracruz, bullfights, and judicial matters.

LCCN: 83-195785

GUIDE: 104, Archivos Microfilmados en la
Biblioteca National de Antropología e Historia. A
brief general description of the collection, and a reel-by-reel
description of the materials filmed. The collection has been filmed
in chronological order, libro by libro, according to the original
arrangement of the documents with some internal indexing.

Typewritten transcripts of diverse printed and manuscript
originals from the 17th through the 20th centuries (with heavy emphasis
on the 20th century), dealing with different aspects, issues, institutions,
and personalities of the Mexican Revolution. It includes transcripts
of reports, proclamations, political, administrative, and military
accounts, memoirs, letters, telegrams, newspaper and magazine articles,
legal documents, historical, theoretical, and interpretive essays
and studies, etc. Among the topics covered are relations with the
U.S. and other nations, border incidents, the "Club Verde" of Sonora,
the "Convención Militar Revolucionaria," the "Primer Congreso
Católico Mexicano," the agrarian and land expropriation and
redistribution problem, relations with the Yaqui and Apache Indians,
Mexico and the foreign press, and military activities. There are
some items in English and French.

LCCN: 83-195810

GUIDE: 104, Archivos Microfilmados en la
Biblioteca National de Antropología e Historia. A
brief general description of the collection and a volume-by-volume
"index list of contents" for the first twenty-five volumes. The
items have been filmed in order by volume; there is an overall internal
chronological order except for several volumes at the end.

Archivo del Libertador contains the papers of Simón Bolívar,
deposited in the Casa Natal in Caracas, Venezuela. It consists of
manuscripts and printed materials by, or related to, Bolivar, his
family, and his career. The collection is in Spanish and includes
personal papers, correspondence, memoirs, documents, decrees, proclamations,
memos, and a variety of other writings and materials. The microfilm
follows the arrangement of the original archive, which is organized
in four main sections: (1) Sección O'Leary; (2) Archivo Nacional
y Otras Fuentes; (3) Sección Juan Francisco Martín;
and (4) Sección Pérez y Soto. LCCN: 83-133498

GUIDE: Z1929.C35, Indice de la Reproducción
en Microfilm del Archivo, a reel index. Each reel is labeled
for its contents. See also Z6616.B587 G73, El Archivo de Bolívar.
Manuscritos y Ediciones, which has a general description
of the original collection as well as information on Bolivariana.
The three volume index by Grisanti, El Archivo del Libertador,
CD4279.5 .B6 C3, provides a detailed description of the first three
sections of the archive.

Originals and some transcripts of rare manuscript materials
from the 16th through the 18th centuries from both Franciscan and
non-Franciscan sources, dealing with activities in Mexico, California,
and the Southwest. The collection includes correspondence, actas,
relaciones, autos, maps, ecclesiastical and vice-regal decrees,
minutes, census lists, statistics, inventories, diaries, etc. Among
the topics covered are ecclesiastical, military and local history,
missionary activities, expulsion of the Jesuits, explorations, discoveries
and conquests of new territories, relations with the Indians, and
daily life. Only cajas 1-46, expedientes 1-1054, and some associated
materials have been filmed. Filmed from holdings of Instituto Nacional
de Antropología e Historia, Mexico.

LCCN: 83-183756

GUIDE: 104, Archivos Microfilmados en la
Biblioteca National de Antropología e Historia. A
brief general description of the collection and a reel-by-reel list
of the materials filmed. Reel 1 of the collection is an inventory
of the collection. See also Ignacio del Rio, Guía del Archivo
Franciscano (Z6611.F73 R56 v. 1) for a description of the original
collection.

A collection of 19th-century handwritten and typed materials
from the personal archives of Valentin Gomez Farias in Mexico, dealing
with his public life. It includes letters, reports, proclamations,
manifestos, plans, referendums, "roll calls," pronuncamientos, etc.
Among the topics covered are political, military, and economic reforms,
the "Texas issue," diverse revolts, the "casa de la moneda," evaluations
of different issues, etc. The collection has been filmed in an overall
chronological order, with scattered internal lists.

A collection of manuscripts and printed materials from
the 19th century dealing with the reign of Maximilian in Mexico.
It includes letters, telegrams, circulars, decrees, broadsides,
budgets, poems, newspaper and magazine clippings, speeches, memos,
manifestos, etc. Among the topics covered are political and military
affairs, international relations and diplomacy, legal matters, commercial
and financial matters. The materials are in Spanish, French, English,
and German.

LCCN: 83-195813

GUIDE: 104, Archivos Microfilmados en la
Biblioteca National de Antropología e Historia. Consists
of a brief overall description of the collection and a list of contents
for the first 20 reels. The collection has been filmed in approximate
chronological order, with many "expedientes" filmed sequentially.

An important art reference tool for researchers. This
collection consists of over 3,000 exhibition catalogs from galleries
and museums in the U.S., Canada, and Western Europe. The collection
includes catalogs from 1900 or later with the important exception
of the Paris Salon for which the collection includes catalogs back
to 1673.

LCCN: 83-139483

GUIDE: Microfiche (w) 83/23 (MicRR Ref). Subject
Index to Art exhibition catalogues on microfiche. (See also
N4390.I52, Index to Art Exhibition Catalogues on Microfiche).
Access is provided by a subject index on microfiche which is divided
into 4 parts: (1) a listing by the author of the catalog, (2) a
listing by title, (3) a listing by agents of publication (i.e.,
museum or gallery), and (4) a listing by subject, including artists'
names. For each entry there is a corresponding three-part number
(e.g., 019. 243. 011) which is needed when requesting the microfiche.

A unique and heavily used collection in the New York
Public Library's Division of Art, Prints, and Photographs. Sources
for biographical information, these files, begun in 1911, were created
for the use of the art reference collections. They include material
on painters, architects, sculptors, art historians, collectors,
connoisseurs, silversmiths, jewelers, furniture and interior designers,
handicraftsmen, commercial artists, and couturiers. The contents
of the files include exhibition brochures, small exhibition catalogs,
gallery announcements, and other detached ephemera.

LCCN: 90-956104

GUIDE: 248, The Artists File: Index.
An alphabetical listing of personal names taken from the file. For
each name a microfiche and frame reference locate the start of the
material on each person.

A full text collection of nearly all federal publications
containing statistical information, from 1974 to date, with some
important earlier publications also included. It includes depository,
non-depository, Government Printing Office and non-Government Printing
Office documents from all branches of the U.S. federal government,
including research from all regulatory agencies, congressional committees,
etc. It does not include highly technical or ephemeral publications,
or large maps. The indexes, abstracts, and microfiche document collection
provide quick subject, author, and title access to a very broad
range of federal documents, among them annual reports of federal
agencies, and nearly all Census Bureau and Bureau of Labor Statistics
publications; American Statistics Index also serves as an index
to many federal periodicals (e.g., Federal Reserve bulletins, Monthly
Labor Review).

LCCN: 90-640863

GUIDE: Z7554.U5 A46, American Statistics
Index. The CD-ROM title, Statistical Masterfile,
is also available for searching ASI items.

Request microfiche by the year of the index used, and ASI's document
accession number (e.g., ASI 1981, 9362-1). The printed index gives
access by author, subject, title, agency report or series number;
indexes "by category" list all documents with statistics broken
down by race, sex, age, geographic area, etc. The separate abstracts
volumes provide a short summary of each document, and full bibliographic
citations.

NOTE: This collection is a supplement to the title Japan,
Korea, and the security of Asia : special studies, 1970-1980.
(Microfilm 86/213. LCCN: 86-893446)

Consists of studies contracted for by the White House and other
federal agencies. Typically the studies were carried out by academic
staff and members of think tanks, particularly those specializing
in U.S. foreign relations and the internal conditions of various
strategically significant countries. Sample titles include, "The
Soviet Far East Buildup and Soviet Risk-Taking against China"
(Rand Corp., 1982); "Japan Resource Dependence" (Naval Postgraduate
School, 1982); "Congressional Presentation Fiscal Year 1984. Annex
II: Asia" (1983, U.S. AID); "Sixty Days to Peace. Implementing
the Paris Peace Accords, Vietnam 1973" (National Defense University,
1982).

LCCN: 86-892126

GUIDE: 105-62, Asia: Special Studies, 1980-1982:
Supplement. A reel guide to the collection. Reports are arranged
by country and then chronologically, with a subject index.

This small group of women, founded by Jessie Daniel Ames,
formed as a special offshoot of the Commission on Interracial Cooperation
(CIC); it merged back into the CIC in 1942. These papers include
correspondence, reports, clippings, pamphlets, legislative materials,
meeting minutes, petitions, questionnaires, speeches, and press-releases.
The collection documents an attempt to mobilize local, regional,
and federal public support for the goal of eradicating violent attacks
and hangings by whites of blacks in the American south.

GUIDE: E185.92 .D83 1984, The Commission
on Interracial Cooperation Papers, 1919-1944, and the Association
of Southern Women for the Prevention of Lynching Papers, 1930-1942:
A Guide to the Microfilm Editions.

A collection of twenty-four diverse monographs on culture,
education, economics, and social conditions, by scholars who include
W. E. B. DuBois, ranging from the end of the 19th century to the
early 20th century. Filmed from holdings of the Library of Congress,
sample titles include, The Negro Church; The
Negro American Family, Negro Business and Business
Education.

LCCN: 14-22109 (for original series)

GUIDE: 35-E, Atlanta University Publications.
Consists of photocopies of original L.C. cards for each of the monographs
filmed.

Contents: Group I, American auctions: Part 1, American
Art Association, 1884-1939; Part 2, American Art Galleries, 1886-1929;
Part 3, Anderson Art Galleries, 1911-1939.

LC Call Number: Microfiche 86/20

Consists of annotated sales and auction catalogs held
by the Knoedler Library, primarily of American and Western European
painting and sculpture, 1884-1939, from three major sources. These
catalogs are vital tools for tracing the history of an art object,
for descriptions and pictures of art held by private collectors,
or revealing contemporary artistic reputations and tastes. The collection
is arranged by catalog date, however, and this makes identification
of individual works or artists difficult without knowing the date
or dates when a work was sold.

LCCN: 86-890003

GUIDE: Not in LC. Some broad indexing and specific
auction catalog titles may be found through the SCIPIO database
in the Research Libraries Information Network (RLIN).

A cumulation of 194 English-language biographical reference
works originally published between 1866 and 1987. Biographical sketches
of more than 95,000 persons from these works are reproduced here
in a single alphabetic sequence.

This is a collection of clippings compiled by the Library of the
Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies.
The clippings include news items, editorials, letters to editors,
and illustrations of Aboriginal interest. These have been clipped
from a wide selection of newspapers, weeklies, and monthlies which
appeared in Australia during the period. The Library of Congress
has coverage for the years 1984-1985, and 1987-1991.

LCCN: 90-656207

GUIDE: Not in LC. A cumulative geographic guide
to headings and an index to the clippings is included for each year.

Entries for monographs through June 1986 and serials
through June 1983. The catalog covers all aspects of anthropology,
including biological anthropology, cultural anthropology, linguistics,
and prehistoric archaeology, as well as methods and techniques of
historical and industrial archaeology. Its strength is in American
archaeology and ethnology, particularly in Mexico and Central America.
Major anthropological journals and compilations such as festschriften
and proceedings of congresses have been indexed for more than 75
years. Citations to periodical articles after June 1983 can be found
in Anthropological Literature, published by Tozzer
Library [Z5112.A57 MRR Alc]. From July 1986 forward, monograph entries
can be found in G.K. Hall's Bibliographic Guide to Anthropology
and Archaeology [Z5111.B47 MRR Alc], an annual supplement.

Some 6,000 letters, arranged topically, pertaining to
the British women's movement, and written from 1801-1972. The main
subjects covered are the social, political, and economic status
of women, with special sections on women in the arts, women travellers,
etc., and several collections of personal papers. They include scattered
correspondence from such figures as Beatrice and Sidney Webb, Helen
Taylor, John Stuart Mill, E. M. Forster, Virginia Woolf, Christina
Rossetti, and Olive Schreiner.

LCCN: 86-890013

GUIDE: Not in LC. Inventories appear on each
fiche, and collectively on fiches 325 through 329. There is also
an additional alphabetic index of names and subjects, on four microfiches
numbered 1 through 4.